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I am reading a timestamp from a device that comes over in integer format representing number of seconds since January 1, 2000. Using Python, how do I convert it to a readable date/time using Jan 1, 2000 as my epoch?

I have tried several datetime functions, but always end up with the incorrect date. I assume that Python automatically assumes a different epoch time than what I need (1970? It's 30 years off).

Here is the line of code I am currently using:

datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp(int(z[i][2])).strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S')

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You can use a timedelta to help you, e.g.:

>>> from datetime import datetime, timedelta
>>> base = datetime(2000, 1, 1) # start of your epoch
>>> base + timedelta(seconds=123456789) # add on a number of seconds
datetime.datetime(2003, 11, 29, 21, 33, 9)

You can also reverse the process using timedelta.total_seconds:

>>> (datetime.now() - base).total_seconds()
468696508.531

And you're right, fromtimestamp takes the number of seconds since 1970/1/1.

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  • Awesome, looks like that fixed it. The line of code now looks like this: 'r3=base + timedelta(seconds=int(z[i][2]))'
    – SnapperTrx
    Nov 7, 2014 at 17:52

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